Padel, Ruth. Whom Gods Destroy. Princeton University Press, 1995.
v
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Mary Renault | |
Dedications | Ruth Padel | She dedicated this book to Myles Burnyeat
, Padel, Ruth. Whom Gods Destroy. Princeton University Press, 1995. v Padel, Ruth. Whom Gods Destroy. Princeton University Press, 1995. xiv |
Education | Anne Carson | Despite her distaste for the survey courses and canonical English poets, AC
eventually re-enrolled at the University of Toronto in 1970 , in the classics program. As an undergraduate she was particularly drawn to passionate... |
Education | Elizabeth Inchbald | |
Education | Mary Elizabeth Coleridge | Later she became interested in Plato
. In 1886 she was one of a group of women who began Greek classes at the Hampstead home of poet and scholar William Cory
, her longtime friend... |
Education | Frances Reynolds | |
Education | Virginia Woolf | Virginia read Aeschylus
, Homer
, Sophocles
, and Plato
, among others, with Clara Pater. In 1902, however, the Cambridge-educated Janet Case
, who was a feminist as well as a classicist, took over... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Katharine Bruce Glasier | KBG
was influenced early in her writing career by authors such as Walt Whitman
, Edward Carpenter
, and Plato
. Thompson, Laurence. The Enthusiasts. Victor Gollancz Limited, 1971. 69 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Frances Lady Norton | FLN
's works, like the volume already published of Gethin, are very largely composed of quotations. Norton addresses this issue in The Applause of Virtue, in her prefatory To the Reader, which opens... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Thomas | This collection contains the harvest of Thomas's poetic career. Her Muse, she says, is unfashionably incapable of dealing with love or obscenity: this shows clearly that her original poetic context was a Restoration one. Thomas, Elizabeth, 1675 - 1731. Miscellany Poems on Several Subjects. Thomas Combes, 1722. 50-1 |
Intertextuality and Influence | Jane Ellen Harrison | Very much like the tours and lectures Harrison began giving this decade, her published text offers vivid, dramatic descriptions of the culture under examination. Her oral and written works are similar in other ways: in... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Elizabeth Carter | Carter's poem To Miss Lynch claims (not for the only time) Katherine Philips
as the model for her own writing. Philips's spotless verse with genuine force exprest / The brightest passion of the human breast... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Vernon Lee | Dedicated to the author's companion and fellow writer Mary Robinson
, this volume is another collection of essays, some previously published. Here Lee begins to dismiss the moral implications and social conditions within and around... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Doris Lessing | DL
takes her title from Plato
's allegory about cave-dwellers who never see the outside world, but believe they can understand it from observing the shadows thrown on the walls of their cave. She applies... |
Intertextuality and Influence | Edna Lyall | Mondisfield Hall, depicted here as it was during the Restoration, is based on Badmondisfield (or Badmondesfield) Hall, an Elizabethan moated manor at Wickhambrook in Suffolk, where as a girl EL
used to stay with... |